Can interim maintenance be counted from separation date instead of case filing? Delhi HC answers clearly—but does this ignore financial strain on husbands?
NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court has clarified an important legal point on interim maintenance under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005. The Court stated that interim maintenance must be calculated from the date when the application is filed, not from the date when the couple separated.
This decision came while hearing a husband’s appeal against a modified maintenance order passed by an appellate court. The bench of Justice Swarna Kanta Sharma explained how interim maintenance, lump sum adjustment, and allegations should be handled at the interim stage.
“…..this Court is of the view that the amount received by the respondent is liable to be adjusted against the interim maintenance awarded to her; however, since the settled legal position is that interim maintenance is to be granted from the date of filing of the application seeking maintenance and not from the date of separation of parties, as held in Rajnesh v. Neha (supra),
the adjustment of the said amount must also be computed from the date of filing of the application and not from the date of separation of the parties……..Accordingly, the amount of Rs. 20,00,000/- received by the respondent-wife from the sale of the property shall be adjusted against the interim maintenance amount of Rs. 25,000/- per month from the date of filing of the application under the PWDV Act, i.e., 20.10.2020, and not from the date of separation in April 2019”, the Court observed.
The case started from a matrimonial dispute. The couple got married in 2013 and have two minor children. After separation in March 2019, the elder child stayed with the husband and the younger child stayed with the wife. The wife then filed a case under the PWDV Act claiming domestic violence and asked for interim maintenance.
The trial court ordered Rs. 25,000 per month as interim maintenance—Rs. 15,000 for the wife and Rs. 10,000 for the child. It also noted that the wife had already received Rs. 20 lakh from sale of a property bought during marriage, and directed that this amount be adjusted.
Later, the appellate court changed this and said the Rs. 20 lakh would cover maintenance from April 2019 (separation) till December 2025. The husband challenged this before the High Court.
The High Court did not fully agree with the appellate court. It clearly held that adjustment must start only from the date of filing the case, i.e., 20 October 2020, not from the date of separation.
The Court also rejected the husband’s claims about the wife’s alleged misconduct and financial behavior. It said such allegations were not proven and cannot be decided without full trial. At interim stage, courts do not go into deep factual disputes.
Further, the Court refused to consider the husband’s personal expenses like loans, insurance, and other payments to reduce maintenance. It stated that maintenance of wife and child is a legal duty and comes before personal financial choices. This effectively means even if a man has heavy financial liabilities, his statutory obligation remains primary.
The husband also argued that the wife is highly educated (postgraduate) and was working earlier but is now not working intentionally to claim maintenance. The Court rejected this argument.
“…..in the present case, in the absence of any material to indicate that the respondent-wife is actually employed or earning any independent income, there is no ground to deny interim maintenance to her merely on the basis that she is a postgraduate”, the Court observed.
The Court balanced the financial condition of both parties and confirmed that Rs. 25,000 per month is reasonable interim maintenance for the wife and child. It also ensured that the Rs. 20 lakh already received will be adjusted properly from the legal date of entitlement.
This judgment again makes it clear that interim maintenance under the PWDV Act is meant to provide immediate financial support. It cannot be denied based on allegations without proof or technical objections.
At the same time, it reflects a recurring legal position where the burden of maintenance continues on the husband despite disputes, allegations, or financial stress—raising ongoing concerns about equitable consideration of both sides in matrimonial litigation.
Explanatory Table Of Laws & Sections Involved
| Law / Provision | Section | Explanation (Simple) | Practical Impact in This Case |
| Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Section 12 | Allows woman to file complaint for domestic violence and seek reliefs like maintenance | Wife filed application under this section for maintenance |
| Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Section 29 | Right to appeal against orders passed by Magistrate | Husband filed appeal before Sessions Court |
| Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Section 2(a) | Defines “aggrieved person” | Court held wife qualifies at interim stage based on allegations |
| Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Section 3 | Defines “domestic violence” | Court said allegations prima facie fall within this definition |
| Indian Penal Code | Sections 34, 406, 498A, 354A | Criminal offences like cruelty, breach of trust, harassment | FIR registered based on wife’s complaint |
| Criminal Procedure Code | Section 125 | Maintenance provision (general law) | Used for legal principle that maintenance starts from application date |
| Supreme Court Judgment | Rajnesh v. Neha (2021) | Maintenance should generally be from date of application | Applied directly by High Court |
| Delhi High Court Judgment | Annurita Vohra v. Sandeep Vohra | Income sharing formula for maintenance | Used to justify ₹25,000 maintenance |
| Supreme Court Judgment | Shailja v. Khobbanna | Capacity to earn ≠ actual earning | Used to reject argument that educated wife should not get maintenance |
Case Details
- Case Title: Anurag Manohar Kankerwal v. Soham Rani
- Case Number: CRL.M.C. 5097/2024 & CRL.M.A. 19483/2024
- Court: High Court of Delhi at New Delhi
- Bench: Hon’ble Dr. Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma
- Judgment Reserved: 03.02.2026
- Judgment Pronounced: 04.04.2026
- Judgment Uploaded: 04.04.2026
- Neutral Citation: 2026:DHC:913
Counsels
- For Petitioner (Husband): Mr. Prateek Jain, Advocate
- For Respondent (Wife): Mr. Sunnirudh Kumar and Ms. Ruby Rani, Advocates
Key Takeaways
- Interim maintenance is strictly from date of application — even if separation happened much earlier, burden still falls on husband once case is filed.
- Husband’s financial liabilities like EMIs, insurance, and family responsibilities are legally sidelined — statutory duty overrides everything.
- Allegations against husband are enough to grant maintenance, but husband’s allegations are dismissed as “unproven” till trial — clear procedural imbalance.
- Even if wife is educated or capable of earning, maintenance cannot be denied unless she is proven to be earning — shifting entire burden onto husband.
- Lump sum already received by wife is adjusted, but still structured in a way that ensures continuous liability on husband — reinforcing long-term financial pressure.
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